How to make water that's full of holes episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 24, 2022 · 30 MIN

How to make water that's full of holes

from Nature Podcast

In this episode:00:45 How adding pores helps water carry gasAlthough water is an excellent solvent, it’s limited in its ability to dissolve gasses. To overcome this a team have developed ‘porous water’ containing tiny cages that can hold large numbers of gas molecules. The team suggest that this technology could have multiple medical applications, including in the development of artificial blood.Research article: Erdosy et al.News and Views: Suspended pores boost gas solubility in water11:35 Research HighlightsSynthetic ‘nerves’ help mice to walk, and planets orbiting a star that’s due to go supernova.Research Highlight: Stretchy synthetic nerve helps mice give ball a mighty kickResearch Highlight: A massive planet circles a huge star doomed to explode14:16 When did hominins get on their feet?One of humanity's defining characteristics is our ability to walk on two legs. However, when this ability evolved remains a mystery. A paper out this week suggests that the species Sahelanthropus tchadensis was walking on two legs seven million years ago – but others dispute these findings. We hear about the research and the debate surrounding it.News: Seven-million-year-old femur suggests ancient human relative walked uprightResearch article: Daver et al.News and Views: Standing up for the earliest bipedal hominins21:45 Briefing ChatWe discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, modelling an enormous, extinct megalodon shark, and a potential way to break down ‘forever chemicals’.The Guardian: Ancient megalodon shark could eat a whale in a few bites, research suggestsNature News: How to destroy ‘forever chemicals’: cheap method breaks down PFASSubscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In this episode:00:45 How adding pores helps water carry gasAlthough water is an excellent solvent, it’s limited in its ability to dissolve gasses. To overcome this a team have developed ‘porous water’ containing tiny cages that can hold large numbers of gas molecules. The team suggest that this technology could have multiple medical applications, including in the development of artificial blood.Research article: Erdosy et al.News and Views: Suspended pores boost gas solubility in water11:35 Research HighlightsSynthetic ‘nerves’ help mice to walk, and planets orbiting a star that’s due to go supernova.Research Highlight: Stretchy synthetic nerve helps mice give ball a mighty kickResearch Highlight: A massive planet circles a huge star doomed to explode14:16 When did hominins get on their feet?One of humanity's defining characteristics is our ability to walk on two legs. However, when this ability evolved remains a mystery. A paper out this week suggests that the species Sahelanthropus tchadensis was walking on two legs seven million years ago – but others dispute these findings. We hear about the research and the debate surrounding it.News: Seven-million-year-old femur suggests ancient human relative walked uprightResearch article: Daver et al.News and Views: Standing up for the earliest bipedal hominins21:45 Briefing ChatWe discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, modelling an enormous, extinct megalodon shark, and a potential way to break down ‘forever chemicals’.The Guardian: Ancient megalodon shark could eat a whale in a few bites, research suggestsNature News: How to destroy ‘forever chemicals’: cheap method breaks down PFASSubscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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This episode is 30 minutes long.

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This episode was published on August 24, 2022.

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In this episode:00:45 How adding pores helps water carry gasAlthough water is an excellent solvent, it’s limited in its ability to dissolve gasses. To overcome this a team have developed ‘porous water’ containing tiny cages that can hold large...

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